Log in to your IBTimes Account

close
ID
Password

Brazil activists fear death squads back



By MICHAEL ASTOR, AP
13 May 2008 @ 03:57 am EST

ABAETETUBA, Brazil - Bishop Flavio Giovenale was crushed by the acquittal last week of a rancher accused of ordering the killing of a crusading American nun -and not just because he admired Dorothy Stang.


Brazil Amazon Activists
A woman prays at the grave of American nun Dorothy Stang in Anapu, Brazil, in Nov. 2007. Bishop Flavio Giovenale was crushed by the acquittal last week of a rancher accused of ordering the killing of Dorothy Stang, a 73-year-old nun from Dayton, Ohio, in Feb. 12, 2005. Giovenale, who spends much of his time battling child prostitution, police corruption and drug abuse, fears the verdict means it's open season again on activists in the Amazon...
1 of 3

Related Topic

Get stories by e-mail on this topic.

E-mail:

Giovenale, who spends much of his time battling child prostitution, police corruption and drug abuse, fears the verdict means it's open season again on activists in the Amazon jungle state of Para.

The Italian priest has long received death threats for his denouncement of the organized crime he says carries more weight than the law in Abaetetuba, a teeming Amazon River port city where trucks barrel past hauling rain forest hardwood. During his three decades in Brazil, he has tried to ignore them.

But since rancher Vitalmiro Moura walked free after a retrial last week, Giovenale fears the wealthy and shadowy business interests driving deforestation of the Amazon will be emboldened to order his killing.

Last year, Moura was sentenced to 30 years in prison for ordering the killing of Stang, a 73-year-old nun from Dayton, Ohio, in a ruling seen as a watershed event ending impunity in a region where community organizers, union leaders and clergy are routinely marked for death.

For Giovenale, Stang was a hero for devoting her life to helping the poor farm without deforesting in a region plagued by wanton environmental destruction, land grabbing, contract killings, slave-like labor and rampant child prostitution.

"The acquittal showed they could kill a famous person like Dorothy, so they certainly wouldn't think twice about killing an unknown bishop like me," he said.

To many Amazon entrepreneurs, people like Stang, Giovenale and others who help the Amazon's poor are interlopers preventing Latin America's largest nation from using the rain forest's natural riches to generate wealth and jobs.

Under a conspiracy theory commonly accepted in Brazil, the nonprofit Amazon groups are actually fronts for foreign nations that want to invade the region, or at least prevent it from developing so Brazil won't become a world power.

"A certain layer of the elite" in Para state regard Moura as the victim and Stang as the villain, said Gov. Ana Julia Carepa. She cautioned other politicians against using Moura's acquittal to revive their public rhetoric against environmental and human rights activists.

Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    Click!
  • Rate this article:

Comments

Post Your Comment

You must be an IBTimes member to post a comment. Login | Register


advertisement
More Politics & Policy
Days from becoming the largest bankruptcy in U.S. history, Lehman Brothers steered millions to departing executives even while pleading for a federal res...
With no let-up in market turmoil in sight, analysts say a coordinated interest rate cut by the European Central Bank, the Bank of England and the U.S. Fe...
The Bush administration, pledging to move quickly and with force, has released details on how financial firms will be selected to manage the largest gove...

Advertisement
Corporate Website Design

Professional Website Design For Corporate - Get a Free Quote Today

advertisement
 
IBTimes.com Web
Partners
International Business Times© 2008 The Ibtimes Company. All Rights Reserved. Terms of service | Privacy Policy | Advertising | About Us | Contact Us | Archives